Auto-explain what likely moved your metrics this week
Feeds on your KPI data and writes the narrative your stakeholders need — what changed, which segments likely drove it, and which movements look unusual. Turns numbers into a review-ready draft instead of a blank page.
Create a skill called "KPI Narrator". I'll give you KPI data (as a table or SQL query results) for the current period and the comparison period. Generate a narrative summary that: (1) States each KPI's current value and period-over-period change. (2) Breaks the change down by key dimensions (segment, region, product) to identify likely drivers visible in the data. (3) Flags changes that appear statistically significant or anomalous based on the history available. (4) Calls out results that should be reviewed by a human before they are presented as explanations. (5) Uses business language, not statistical jargon ("Enterprise revenue drove most of the growth" not "the Enterprise segment coefficient was 1.12"). If I provide a sample narrative from a previous report, match the tone and structure. Keep narratives concise — 2-3 sentences per KPI, not paragraphs.
Executives don't want a table of numbers — they want to know what changed,
what looks unusual, and which dimensions likely drove the movement. Writing
those narratives is time-consuming and repetitive. This skill generates a
draft narrative from your KPI data so you start from something useful instead
of a blank page.
Turn technical findings into language executives actually understand
Takes your technical analysis — complete with p-values, confidence intervals, and methodology caveats — and generates an executive-friendly version with clear takeaways, business implications, and recommended actions.
Stop KPI arguments by defining metrics once and reusing everywhere
Many reporting conflicts come from undefined or inconsistent KPIs (what counts as a lead, which revenue number, what window, etc.). This recipe builds a KPI dictionary and maps each KPI to source systems and owners, including "confidence levels" and known limitations.
Local-first AI assistant that automates small daily tasks safely on your device
A personal, local-first AI assistant that automates small daily tasks—organizing files, setting reminders, and monitoring system events—without touching sensitive data or taking risky actions without your approval.
Stop audio drift by quarantining variable-frame-rate clips at ingest
Audio slowly drifts out of sync or randomly desyncs in your timeline when footage is variable frame rate — common with iPhone footage, screen recordings, and some OBS workflows. This recipe catches VFR clips at ingest, transcodes them to constant frame rate, and quarantines the originals so drift never reaches your edit.